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Nasa data
reveals dramatic rise in intensity of weather events
Extreme
events such as floods and droughts are becoming more frequent, longer-lasting
and more severe, study says
Roger
Harrabin
Tue 17
Jun 2025 06.00 BST
New data
from Nasa has revealed a dramatic rise in the intensity of weather events such
as droughts and floods over the past five years.
The study
shows that such extreme events are becoming more frequent, longer-lasting and
more severe, with last year’s figures reaching twice that of the 2003-2020
average.
The
steepness of the rise was not foreseen. The researchers say they are amazed and
alarmed by the latest figures from the watchful eye of Nasa’s Grace satellite,
which tracks environmental changes in the planet. They say climate change is
the most likely cause of the apparent trend, even though the intensity of
extremes appears to have soared even faster than global temperatures.
A Met
Office expert said increases in extremes have long been predicted but are now
being seen in reality. He warned that people were unprepared for such weather
events, which would be outside previous experience.
The data
is not yet peer-reviewed, and researchers said they would need another 10 or
more years to confirm to conclusively call it a trend. The data has been
co-produced by Dr Bailing Li, from the Hydrological Sciences Laboratory of
Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center – affiliated with the University of
Maryland’s Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, who told the
Guardian: “We can’t prove causation yet – we would need a much longer dataset.
It’s difficult to pinpoint exactly what’s happening here, but other events
suggest that (global) warming is the driving factor. We are seeing more and
more extreme events round the world, so this is certainly alarming.”
Her
colleague Dr Matthew Rodell, chief of hydrologic sciences at Goddard, also
counselled caution over the latest data, but admitted that he too was worried
about the apparent acceleration of a trend in destructive events. “It’s
certainly scary,” he said.
The
earlier part of the Nasa time series was published in Nature Water in 2023. The
researchers used a mathematical formula to calculate the total effect of a
weather event in terms of severity measured by the total area affected, the
duration of the event and how wet or dry it was. The paper warned that
disturbance to the water system would be one of the most significant
consequences of the climate crisis.
The paper
noted that the intensity of extremes was strongly correlated with global mean
temperature, more so than with El Niño, the influential ocean current, or other
climate indicators, suggesting that continued warming of the planet will cause
more frequent, more severe, and longer and/or larger droughts and floods.
The Nasa
researchers produced the updated statistics at the request of the Oxford-based
research organisation Global Water Intelligence, whose head, Christopher
Gasson, said water companies were in the firing line of climate change – facing
too much water or too little water – or both.
He said
most water companies were completely unprepared to cope with the changes under
way. “This is extremely scary,” he said. “The industry needs to attract
investment on a massive scale.”
Prof
Richard Betts, head of climate change impacts at the Met Office and Exeter
University, said of the Nasa report: “This is a stark reminder that a hotter
planet means more severe floods and droughts. This has long been predicted, but
is now being seen in reality.
“The
world isn’t prepared for the changes in intense rainfall and drought that are
now occurring. All around the world people have built their ways of living
around the weather that they and their forebears were used to, which leaves
them vulnerable to more frequent and severe extremes that are outside past
experience. As well as urgently ramping up efforts to reduce emissions to halt
global warming, we need to catch up on adaptation to live better with the
changes that are already happening.”
A recent
report by the charity WaterAid said extreme fluctuations between floods and
droughts were devastating millions of lives, with many major cities
experiencing “whiplash” events from drought to flood or heat to cold – or vice
versa.
The Royal
Meteorological Society warned that such sudden transitions from one extreme to
the other caused more harm than the individual events alone, affecting
agriculture, infrastructure, biodiversity and human health.
Their
report said: “Rising temperatures are disrupting key drivers such as the jet
stream and the polar vortex, changing our weather patterns.”
Asher
Minns, from the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of
East Anglia, said that their own unpublished UK-based studies also showed more
intensification of both droughts and floods as well as abrupt shifts between
extreme wet and dry conditions – called hydroclimatic whiplash events.
Meanwhile,
the World Meteorological Organization’s latest report calculates an 80% chance
that at least one of the next five years will top 2024 as the warmest year on
record.
It says
global temperatures are set to continue to increase over the next five years,
increasing climate risks and impacts on societies, economies, and sustainable
development.
The
unpredictability of extreme events revealed in the new data is likely to alarm
the insurance industry, which bases current premiums on previous trend data.
This could have widespread effects across entire economies.

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